Arr. VII. Nene fe Rocking Stone; n Savoy, Massachu- 
seélts, wr 3 Dr. t = ORTE be i AuDICAa- 
ted to ihe Berkshire Lyceam:)” af oe greene 
Ix a late excursion from Plainfield, a little before réueh- 
‘ing the village in Savoy, we turned to the south nearly op- 
“posite a school-house, and after riding about a mile over a 
very rough and disagreeable road, the rocking stone, which 
was the object of our Set Bopearen.- in a ey con- 
peter situation on the rig 
of granite, and yene cell with the mosses aa lichens 
common in this part of the country. It may be moved 
with ease, so as to describe « an are of about — inches, by 
he wei bt of the ho jody on one a ahd the other 
he ground around” s first cleared, 
s Lam credibly informed, moved by rite wind, and 
i. tw 7 
fey Srobably this may be the case at present, though it is 
supposed to weigh ten or twelve tons, The noise, that it 
makes in moving, is so little as to be scarcely noticed. 
aoe rock on which it lies, is a coarse grained granite cu- 
lies on us ey Kaci of this ledge, and appears 
in n three points nearly in a right line across pe 
is rock, so far as T can learn, has hitherto « excite od 
ery litle attention j i ns 
cate 
Postscript. ss S 
Since the preceding account was written, I Bs visited 
a very remarkable rock in the south-west part of Lane 
sbo- 
rough. It is of limestone, and lies on another rock of the 
same kind. It is about 26 feet in length, and about 18 in’ 
breadth touching the rock, on which it lies for about 24 
feet, having no support at either end, and appearing ready 
to slide off and crush the beholder. ‘To the eye, therefore, 
